Not All Multi-Strategy Funds Are Built the Same

Donald Pepper

Co-CEO & Head of Multi-Strategy

Donald Pepper

Co-CEO & Head of Multi-Strategy
Donald joined Trium Capital as Co-CEO in 2017. He took on the role of Head of Multi-Strategy in October 2024, having been on the Multi-Strategy Investment Committee for several years prior to this. He began his career at Goldman Sachs in 1987 in Fixed Income. In 2000, he started to focus on Hedge Funds in Prime Brokerage at Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch, where he was Managing Director of Prime Brokerage in EMEA until 2008, when he moved to become Head of Hedge Funds at New Star Asset Management and Henderson Global Investors, His responsibilities included being Co-Portfolio Manager of two Multi-Strategy Hedge Funds. In 2010, Donald moved to TT International as Investment Director before joining Old Mutual Global Investors in 2012 as Managing Director of Alternatives, where he was a member of the Quarterly Investment Committee and the Style Premia Investment Committee. Donald read Philosophy, Politics & Economics at The Queen’s College, Oxford, where he received an MA. He is a CFA Charterholder and holds the CFA Certificate in ESG Investing.
Trium Multi-Strategy UCITS
Trium Multi-Strategy UCITS Fund

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Multi-strategy hedge funds are attracting enormous investor interest. It is easy to see why. Some of the industry’s largest platforms have delivered strong double-digit returns with low correlation to broader markets. In a world where genuine alpha is scarce, that combination is highly prized.

But in conversations, “multi-strategy” and “pod shop” are often used interchangeably. They shouldn’t be.

These are structurally different models, with different economics, incentives and investor outcomes.

The Pod Platform Model

The large pod platforms operate with a broadly consistent architecture. Capital is distributed across dozens, sometimes hundreds, of independent investment teams running tightly controlled books. Risk is centrally managed, allocations are dynamic, and capital is frequently reallocated based on performance.

The model is sophisticated and operationally intensive. It relies on substantial infrastructure: centralised risk systems, technology, large amounts of data and a continuous pipeline of investment talent. Investment Team turnover is often high by design, reflecting the competitive nature of the system.

The investment process is often risk-led rather than investment outcome-led. Stop losses are rigidly enforced and will lead to large reductions in allocated capital and to Investment Teams being cut aggressively, encouraging a “safety-first”, cautious approach that can limit long-term return-generation opportunities at the pod level.

Overall results have been compelling. But the model also comes with clear, important trade-offs for investors.

Costs

Multi-manager platforms can be expensive structures. Pod-level incentive payouts, often 15-20% but reaching as high as 40% of profits generated, sit alongside fund-level performance fees and extensive pass-through operating costs[[1]][[2]][[3]]. As a result, investors may ultimately retain a materially smaller share of underlying trading profits than headline returns imply.

To deliver the net return expectations investors target, pass-through platform models require materially higher gross returns to offset the significant fee and operating cost burden. By contrast, more traditional multi-manager structures can achieve comparable net outcomes with lower gross return requirements, which may prove more sustainable over the long term.

Liquidity

Terms are typically designed around platform stability rather than investor flexibility, with long lock-ups, notice periods and gates increasingly standard across the industry.

Transparency

Despite institutional infrastructure, transparency can be limited. The complexity of managing hundreds of teams often leaves investors with less visibility into underlying exposures, capital allocation and risk concentration than they might expect.

None of this is inherently problematic. These are simply features of a model optimised for scale, diversification and capital allocation efficiency, but they remain important considerations for allocators.

A Different Multi-Strategy Approach

A multi-strategy fund can also be built differently.

At Trium Capital, strategies are combined deliberately to construct a diversified portfolio rather than assembled as independent trading pods competing for internal capital. The distinction is subtle but important.

Our portfolio managers run clearly defined sleeves within a broader multi-strategy framework, while also managing their own single-strategy funds. The structure is designed to encourage long-term alignment, entrepreneurial ownership and stability of talent. Many of our portfolio managers invest in their standalone fund alongside their clients.

Investment process driven by a patient, return-seeking approach

The investment approach has a return-seeking mantra, rather than a loss-minimising mantra. Stop loss levels are a signal for a thorough review, not an automatic capital reduction. A more patient, mean-reverting approach is taken. Capital may be added in a drawdown. This creates the opportunity to profit from a rebound rather than only participate in 50% of a recovery (if an allocation were to be halved), having suffered the drawdown with 100% of allocated capital.

The economic model also differs

  • Performance fees are calculated on the net returns at the portfolio level, rather than at each sleeve level, ensuring investors pay on overall value creation rather than isolated winning sleeves.
  • Business operating expenses are covered within the management fee rather than passed through separately to investors.
  • Expenses are typically limited to a narrower list, excluding business expenses such as recruitment expenses and travel & entertainment budgets that may often feature in Pod Shop expenses.[[4]]

 

Overall, this typically results in much lower fee/expense levels being borne by investors. Structured as a single fund rather than a fund-of-funds, avoiding a second layer of fees while maintaining full transparency and centralised risk oversight.

Liquidity differs too

Given the model’s flexibility, better liquidity (Monthly, Weekly or Daily) is often more achievable under this approach.

The objective is not to replicate a pod platform in a different wrapper. It is to offer diversified alternative returns through a structure designed around investor alignment, transparency and long-term portfolio construction.

Why the Distinction Matters

For allocators, the difference matters because structure ultimately shapes outcomes.

Two strategies can both be labelled “multi-strategy” while operating with very different fee models, liquidity frameworks and risk architectures. Those distinctions may matter most during periods of market stress, when alignment, liquidity and portfolio construction become more important than headline returns alone.

Three questions are worth considering for any manager describing themselves as multi-strategy:

  1. Are performance fees netted across the portfolio?
  2. Are business operating costs absorbed by the manager or passed through to investors?
  3. Is liquidity structured primarily around the investor’s needs or the platform’s business desires?

 

The answers often reveal more about a strategy than a Sharpe ratio presentation slide.

Conclusion

“Multi-strategy” has become a broad industry label covering very different businesses. Pod platforms and diversified multi-strategy funds can both be highly effective approaches. But they are not interchangeable.

They differ in how capital is allocated, how talent is incentivised, how fees are charged and how investor liquidity is treated.

Both models have strengths. Both can deliver attractive outcomes. But investors should obtain transparency on what sits beneath the label.

Diversification may still be the closest thing investing has to a free lunch. But understanding exactly how that diversification is being delivered, and at what cost, matters just as much.

The views expressed should not be viewed as investment recommendations and are subject to change. This material is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, an offer, or a recommendation.

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